- Disc One:
- Commentary by Malcolm McDowell and historian Nick Redman
- Theatrical trailer
- Disc Two:
- Channel 4 documentary: Still Tickin’: The Return of Clockwork Orange
- New featurette: Great Bolshy Yarblockos! Making A Clockwork Orange
-
Career profile: O Lucky Malcolm!
A Clockwork Orange [2-Disc Edition] (DVD)
Stanley Kubrick
Currently unavailable
SHIPS FREE in U.S.
Amoeba Review
Charles Reece 12/31/1969
Special Features
Alex’s fun comes to an end when he’s betrayed by his droogs after having killed a lady. After 2 years in prison, Alex charms his way into an experimental procedure at the Ludovico lab, which via behavior modification instills in him an aversion to sex and violence, as well as his beloved 9th, which happened to be the background music to one of the videos he was forced to watch. He can look, but he can no longer touch, his feelings now associated with a crippling nausea. Having been turned into a normal(-ized) citizen, Alex is released back into society. The violence he perpetrated in the first act is inflicted back on him by his former victims to which he can only respond with learned helplessness. Through the repercussions of the last creative act left to him, an attempt at suicide, the world is restored of violent personal meaning to the familiar tune of Ludwig van.
The film caused many heated and contradictory reactions upon its release (as is well covered in the excellent documentary that comes with the DVD). Kubrick doesn’t justify Alex’s behavior by having us closely identify with him, as some critics have claimed. That explanation is offered in the film by the writer Mr. Alexander (Patrick McGee), who in the third act, wants to use Alex to bring down the current dictatorial government. Alexander warms up to Alex as a poor lad not responsible for what he’s done, because of his traumatic environment; that is, until Alexander realizes who the masked Gene Kelly was doing the forced in-out in-out on his wife. No longer seeing him as a product, Alexander holds Alex accountable for what he is, an active agent. The film isn’t, therefore, a desensitizing excuse for violence based on a cynical view of society (although Kubrick was certainly a cynic). The violence demonstrates to the audience, like it does for Mr. Alexander, the need for free will in determining responsibility. Nor is the film a right-wing fantasy as other critics have maintained. When the government fails to contain the challenge Alex’s willfulness has proven to be to the ruling management theory, it does what managers do best, and makes a deal with him to maintain a semblance of control. If anything, the film is a civil libertarian parable warning of the dangers of our tendency towards bureaucracy, where treating every aspect of culture ( from people to morality to art) as mere means will ultimately serve to justify any choice, belief or action so long as it perpetuates the system itself.
Product Details
- Director: Stanley Kubrick
- Rating: R
- Label: Warner Studios
- Release Date: 10/23/2007
- Run Time: 136 minutes
- Catalogue #: 80672